Most people have heard of the drug companies Pfizer, Eli
Lilly and Merck but not necessarily Animal Pharma companies with names like Zoetis
and Elanco. Animal Pharma operates under the public's radar because the
hormones, antibiotics, growth promoters, antiparasite and fungal drugs and
vaccines it uses are not on the food labels. Nor do ads for the drugs appear on
TV or safety scandals about them reach Capitol Hill. Still, Animal Pharma is a
huge revenue engine for Pharma that sells drugs by the ton and provides a never-ending supply of compliant "patients."

Factory farming which confines animal "units" to minimal
space to save money has been a boon for Animal Pharma. Such "efficiencies" require high use
of growth-producing drugs and drugs to treat and prevent diseases caused by
crowding, stress, and immobility. Despite the drugs, tragic
losses from bird flu and porcine
epidemic diarrhea virus have occurred which Big Food has largely kept hidden
from the public.

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The drugs used in Big Food's meat production would be a
tough sell if the public knew about them. For example, who wants to eat an
animal treated with the antibiotic tilmicosin? The drug label, intended for the
farmer, says, "Not for human use. Injection of this drug in humans has been
associated with fatalities." Tilmicosin's label even has an emergency phone
number printed right on the bottle, as well as a note telling physicians what
to do in case the farmer accidentally injects himself. (It says, "The
cardiovascular system is the target of toxicity and should be monitored
closely. Cardiovascular toxicity may be due to calcium channel blockade.") Yet
tilmicosin is widely used in food animals and even shows up in the milk of
treated dairy cows, reports central Ohio's WBNS-10 TV news.

Who wants to eat pork, beef and turkeys made with the widely
used growth producing drug ractopamine?
Its label says, "Not for use in humans...Use protective clothing,
impervious gloves, protective eye wear, and a NIOSH [National Institute for
Occupational Safety and Health]-approved dust mask."

Three years after ractopamine's 1999 approval for pigs, the
FDA accused its manufacturer Elanco, Eli Lilly's animal subsidiary, of withholding
information about ractopamine's "safety and effectiveness" and "adverse animal drug
experiences" in a 14 page warning letter.

Ractopamine is banned in Europe, China and 160 countries and
actually caused riots in Taiwan in 2007. A rumor that Taiwan's ractopamine ban
was going to be lifted caused 3,500 pig farmers and party members to congregate
at the Department of Health and Council of Agriculture in Taipei City some carrying
pigs and throwing dung.

The USDA's Food Safety and Inspection Service has
found the antibiotic gentamicin in dairy cows sold for food. Gentamicin is
an antibiotic so dangerous that there is no published tolerance in edible
animal tissue. One dairy farm caught selling gentamicin-contaminated animals
for public consumption--Willet Dairy in Locke, New York--was featured on Nightline
in 2010 for animal abuse. Gentamicin is known for harming kidneys and
ear/balance systems in humans and for remaining in livestock for 18 months or
more.

A 2010 USDA Office of the Inspector General report found violative
levels of metals, anti-parasite vaccines and medicines were knowingly
released into the human food supply. The metals included copper and arsenic.
Also found in meat released to the public were penicillin, the antibiotics
florfenicol, sulfamethazine and sulfadimethoxine, the anti-parasite drug
ivermectin and the nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug flunixin. Four plants,
said the report, had an astounding 211 drug residue violations, but repeat
violators--"individuals who have a history of picking up dairy cows with drugs
in their system and dropping them off at the plant"--are widely tolerated by the
inspection service, says the report.

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Animal Pharma's unlabeled drugs are dangerous for animals
too. Images of cattle crippled on Zilmax, a chemical cousin to ractopamine,
moved Tyson temporarily to tell feedlot customers it would not accept
Zilmax-fed cattle and Merck temporarily suspended Zilmax sales. In a short
period of time, the FDA reported 285 US cattle dying unexpectedly or being
destroyed after being fed Zilmax, 75 animals losing hooves and 94 with
pneumonia. The drug is again for sale by
Merck "For increased rate of weight gain, improved feed efficiency, and
increased carcass leanness in cattle fed in confinement for slaughter during
the last 20 to 40 days on feed."

Martha Rosenberg is an award-winning investigative public health reporter who covers the food, drug and gun industries. Her first book, Born With A Junk Food Deficiency: How Flaks, Quacks and Hacks Pimp The Public Health, is distributed by Random (more...)